152 
BIRDS OF COLORADO. 
Page 29. Add. CouES, Hlliott. The Expeditions of Zeb- 
ulon Montgomery Pike, To Headwaters of the Mississippi 
River, Through Louisiana Territory and in New Spain, 
During the Years 1805-6-7. A New Edition.by 
Elliott Cones .... In Three Volumes. Vol. II. Arkan¬ 
sas Journey — Mexican Tour. New York, Francis P. 
Harper, 1895, pp. 955. 
Contains the same bird notes as the original edition with the addition of 
a specific name to the description of the Carolina Paroquet. 
Page 30. Addd Editorial. The Republican^ April 29, 1897. 
[Local newspaper, published at Rocky P'ord, Colo.] 
Note of a Scarlet Ibis killed in that vicinity a few days before and 
mounted by Bert Beymer. [Specimen was really the White-faced Glossy Ibis.} 
Editorial. The Republican^ June 3, 1897. 
Further notes on the capture of the birds mentioned in a previous issue 
with the same error of identification. 
Evermann, B. W. and Jenkins, O. P. Ornithology from a 
Railroad Train. O. & O. XIIL 1888, pp. bj. 
Notes on twenty-one species of birds seen on a trip through the Arkansas 
Valley and up the Las Animas River to Trinidad. 
Pnge 33. Add. Ingraham, D. P. Additional Records of the 
Flammulated Owl {^Megascops jlamnieola') in Colorado, 
A2ik.^ XIV. 1897,/. 70J. 
Two sets of eggs taken in May, 1897, near Beulah, 
Page 34. Add. Morrison. C. F. The Tricolored Blackbird 
in Colorado. O. & O. XII. 1887, p. loj. 
Birds supposed to have been seen near Fort Lewis, February 3, 1887. 
Page 35. Add. Pike, Z. M. Exploratory Travels through 
the Western Territories of North America: comprising a 
Voyage from St. Louis, on the Mississippi, to the Source 
of that River, and a Journey through the Interior of 
Louisiana and the north-eastern Provinces of New Spain. 
Performed in the years 1805, 1806, 1807, by Order of the 
Government of the United States. By Zebulon Mont¬ 
gomery Pike, Major 6th Regt. United States Infantry. 
London: Paternoster Row. 1811. Denver: W. H. Law¬ 
rence & Co. 1889. 
This is a reprint of the second edition. The book lays no claim to scien¬ 
tific ornithology, but it is interesting as being the first book that makes specific 
references to Colorado birds. Five species are mentioned or described. 
Page 36. Add. Ridgway, Robert. A Monograph of the 
Genus Leucosticte^ Swainson: or. Gray-crowned Purple 
